Voters' Rolls

A guide to finding people who had the vote in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries in Glasgow and the West of Scotland.

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What do I need to know before I start?

Try to find:

address of voter (essential after 1873/74)

dates when the person lived at that address​

For records up to 1873/74, the Glasgow voters' rolls are arranged alphabetically by the voters' names for each ward. This should allow you to search for ancestors, even when you do not have an address. From 1874/75 voters' rolls are arranged by address within each ward so you will need an address. Street indices are available to identify the correct ward and voters' roll.​​​​​​​​​​

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What records can I find in The Mitchell: Special Collections and Glasgow City Archives?

Voters’ rolls, or electoral registers, list those people eligible to vote in local, parliamentary and other national elections. Special Collections and the City Archives both hold voters' rolls for Glasgow. In addition the Archives has voters' rolls for areas absorbed into Glasgow as well as for areas of the former Strathclyde Regional Council.

Not everyone had the vote. Very few people were eligible pre-1832, when the system was reformed. Subsequent acts of parliament in 1867 and 1884 further increased the numbers of males eligible to vote. In 1918 all men over 21 were eligible to vote and all women over 30.

Only males could vote from 1832 to 1918 in parliamentary elections. Women could vote in municipal elections. Unmarried women and married women, not living with their husband, who were proprietors or tenants, could vote for: burgh councillors from 1882 and county councillors from 1889. In 1930 all men and women over 21 were eligible to vote.

The voters' rolls include the following information:

first name and surname

place of abode

occupation (until 1918)

nature of qualification for the vote (until 1918)

address where property is located (until 1918)

Special Collections has the voters' rolls and street indices for Glasgow. These include:

Dumbartonshire, Lanarkshire, Renfrewshire, mainly 20th century, with occasional early lists of voters as part of Family and Estate Records

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What records can I see online?

New! For the first time Glasgow voters' rolls (1857-1962) will be available online via Ancestry from Friday 16th September 2016. As a library member you have free access to this database in every Glasgow library. This powerful tool will enable you to search the database by name rather than address so will not only speed up your research but will also enable you to delve deeper into the lives of your ancestors.​